Good point on warranty and is it really useful? Three times I have seen first hand pack harnesses fail. Warranty is rather meaningless when you are day one on the five-eight day OLT walk and your pack packs it in. In one of the cases the manufacturer gave the owner a full credit. Not sure on the last case as the young lad is still carrying his pack as hand luggage. In my case the manufacturer claimed that it was the old company not the new company's problem. Um? Check to see who owns the brand nowadays and avoid certain names like the plague

The brand name is still the same on the pack but such an approach has cost them a great deal in lost sales to a confirm gear freak like me
I tend to see a warranty as a mark of confidence by the manufacturer rather than marketing tool to balance reduction in quality with legislative "fit for the purpose" demands. But others see it as balancing lowest quality with highest price and replacing the dude items. The hint is warranties limited to the statutory minimums or a history of blaming "user misuse". Sure some users will destroy anything but I do find it hard to believe that all users are doing this.
Frankly it is frightening how many things nowadays fail first day out of the box. Hitech boots is an example. Paddy Pallin sent them back and after the mandatory two or greater week delay issued a full credit. Great that PP were willing to solve the problem but still mucked up the person's hiking plans for those weekends. Wilderness Equipment took two attempts to fix an obvious design issue with their stitching on my gaiters. In the end they came through but much better if the issue did not exist in the first place. Again PP stood by their customer but this cost them money that has to come from higher margins.
Today my latest fix for my gear addiction turned up after six weeks delay due to US Post misplacing the parcel. Actually the first time as normally postage time from the USA is excellent. One torch was dead on arrival. The head lamp refused to work with the high performance cells as claimed, and the third had a known design problem that was identified on a forum similar to this. Now I am sure that the supplier shipped the products in good faith and will likely solve the issues but the cost of doing so means ever future order needs to be a little bit dearer. Yes the items were bleeding edge stuff but the brands are normally excellent so wondering what the heck happened.
Quality control is paramount with bushwalking as when an item fails you can not just belt down to the nearest gum tree and buy another one. I can better understand why many people tend to prefer items with a proven history of working rather than going for the latest craze in weight saving or trendiness. Problem is brand owners change, even if the brand name does not, and quality control or standards change. I do appreciate quality companies like One Planet, Hilleberg, etc. Also for some the over engineering of Black Diamond walking poles is appreciated. For others it is unnecessary weight. No issue as long as they can get what they want and I can as well unhindered by restraint of trade agreements.
Cheers
"lt only took six years. From now on, l´ll write two letters a week instead of one."
(Shawshank Redemption)